Nassau: Bethpage tops in philosophy

Bethpage High students competed in a 2012 Kids Philosophy Slam, recently earning their school the Most Philosophical School in America designation. It’s the sixth such title for the school. Photo Credit: Handout

Bethpage High students competed in a 2012 Kids Philosophy Slam, recently earning their school the Most Philosophical School in America designation. It’s the sixth such title for the school. (Credit: Handout)

Bethpage High School students are tops nationwide when it comes to philosophical thinking.

The school recently won the designation of Most Philosophical School in America in the 2012 Kids Philosophy Slam, an annual program designed to make philosophy fun and accessible and to help promote critical thinking skills among youth.

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Bethpage High School students are tops nationwide when it comes to philosophical thinking.

The school recently won the designation of Most Philosophical School in America in the 2012 Kids Philosophy Slam, an annual program designed to make philosophy fun and accessible and to help promote critical thinking skills among youth.

This is the sixth time Bethpage has won the title in the past 11 years, school officials said.

"A lot of people think philosophy is all about debating issues, but it's not," said Wendy Way, a Bethpage history and philosophy teacher who also is adviser of the school's philosophy club. "In philosophy there is no right or wrong answer. We just want kids to think critically."

To be selected for the designation, Way submitted a write-up on how students have implemented philosophy in the community and her pupils submitted 130 essays on the topic "What is the meaning of life?" Their notable philosophy feats have ranged from winning the 2011 Long Island Ethics Bowl to speaking at the Ethical Humanist Society of Long Island.

"It is completely immoral to insist that life has meaning," wrote Dagur, president of the school's philosophy club. "We long for one so as to fill the void created by the truth that everything we experience is random and without purpose."

Keith Hoge, a senior at Garden City High School, was recently named national winner of the American Sleep Medicine Foundation's High School Topical Review in Sleep Science Contest. To win, he wrote a 3,000-word essay on the science of sleep and wakefulness.

Nineteen students from Nassau County took home grand or special awards last month in various categories at the 2012 Intel International Science and Engineering Fair in Pittsburgh. The science research competition, coordinated by the Society for Science & the Public, included more than 1,500 students from roughly 70 countries and saw some 400 awards issued in various categories.

Fifteen Long Island students were recently among 274 nationwide to win 2012 Achievement Awards in Writing from the National Council of Teachers of English based on teacher nominations, a sample of their best writing, and an impromptu essay on a themed topic.